RANDY WELLS

Randy Wells has been a reporter and staff writer at The Indiana Gazette since 1988. His regular assignments include coverage of the Indiana County commissioners, Indiana Borough council and the Marion Center Area School District. His email address is rwells@indianagazette.net.

Articles by RANDY WELLS

Indiana Borough council Tuesday agreed to commit $30,000 to a match for a grant to help pay for engineering and other soft costs for the proposed multimodal transportation corridor through the borough. [Read More]

As the deadline nears for a grant that would help build a proposed multimodal transportation corridor across Indiana and link the Hoodlebug Trail to the S&T Recreation Complex, Indiana University of Pennsylvania officials confirmed they have some reservations about the plan. [Read More]

A series of public informational meetings will be held in high school auditoriums in mid-June to help Indiana County property owners better understand the next phase of the countywide property reassessment. [Read More]

The second man who pleaded guilty to starting last summer’s $1 million fire at the V-King Corp. drilling rig assembly plant near Tide, Center Township, was sentenced Friday to jail time, fines and court costs. [Read More]

The second man who pleaded guilty to starting last summer’s $1 million fire at the V-King Corp. drilling rig assembly plant near Tide, Center Township, was sentenced Friday to jail time, fines and court costs. [Read More]

Indiana County’s incumbent Republican commissioners won nominations Tuesday to run for another term and the two female commissioner candidates on the Democratic ballot also advanced to the fall general election. [Read More]

Indiana County auditor Donna Cupp, dissatisfied with the work performance of her fellow Republican auditor Helen Clark, months ago recruited political newcomer Kimberly McCullough to be a third candidate in Tuesday’s race for two Republican nominations for county auditor. [Read More]

The Marion Center Area School District directors Monday approved a tentative 2015-16 general fund budget that may require a 1.72 mill tax increase, but district business manager Richard Martini expressed some optimism that could change before final action is taken in June. [Read More]